Learning to master the dignified ‘no’
Every woman founder eventually reaches a moment where she must choose between being liked and leading
Women are often praised for empathy, understanding and care and expected to avoid decisions that cause disappointment. We take responsibility not only for results, but also for people’s emotions, self-esteem, and future paths.
A few weeks ago, I had to deliver two hard ‘no’s’. The decision was final and necessary: a student could not continue in one of our top-rated programmes, nor could a colleague continue working with us. These were not impulsive choices or emotional reactions, but leadership decisions made after careful consideration.
These are the conversations every leader dreads. You postpone them, search for alternatives, and hope something will change so you can avoid the inevitable because saying a hard no feels personal and heavy. And it never gets easier, but you can get better.
Leadership and responsibility
As a CEO, my goal in every difficult conversation is clear and non-negotiable. Even after a hard no, the person must leave with dignity intact, with clarity about the decision, and with a sense of direction for what comes next. A closed door should never translate into a loss of self-worth.
Hard conversations often catch the other party off guard. There is almost always one more option to explore, one more mistake to correct, one more opportunity to improve. But leadership means recognising when that moment has passed. At that point, someone must say the words no one wants to hear—and more often than not, that responsibility falls to me, because no one else volunteers.
